Skin and Soft Tissue Infections - Cellulitis Flashcards
For non-purulent cellulitis, what is first-line treatment?
Most likely GAS
Cephalexin
100% susceptibility
Optimal dosing of cephalexin for adults is:
Cellulitis
500mg po QID
Optimal dosing of cephalexin for pediatrics is:
Cellulitis
50 - 100 mg/kg/day, divided QID
QID can be hard to be compliant with
If an individual has a true penicillin allergy, what is an alternative choice?
Clindamycin or Erythromycin
Resistance rates are higher (7-20%)
For purulent cellulitis (MSSA), what are 1st line treatment options?
Not suspecting MRSA
Cephalexin or Cloxacillin
Optimal dosing of cloxacillin for adults is:
Cellulitis
500 mg po QID
Optimal dosing of cloxacillin for pediatrics is:
50 mg/kg/day divided QID
If MRSA is suspected, or the patient has a true penicillin allergy, what antibiotics could be given?
TMP/SMX or Doxycycline
Little resistance
Both BID
Clindamycin should be avoided when MRSA is suspected, because:
Resistance issues
~73% susceptibility, better options
HOWEVER, can potentially cover GAS and MRSA - but resistant
Ciprofloxacin should not be used in cases of cellulitis because:
It does not cover the likely organisms and has high resistance rates
Mostly for G- bacilli and pseudomonal infections
Empiric therapy that can cover for GAS and MRSA include the two following antibiotics:
Cephalexin + TMP/SMX or doxycycline
Cephalexin covers GAS, others cover MRSA
For uncomplicated cellulitis, how many days of treatment is sufficient?
5 days
5 days as effective as 10 days, given evidence of clinical improvement
Timeline of cellulitis recovery (after incision, drainage, and antibiotics) is unique because:
Condition may worsen in the first few days
Part of healing process, not treatment failure
How long may full skin healing take (reduction of inflammation and symptoms)?
1-2 weeks after antibiotics are stopped
What are two non-pharmacological methods that are key to successful cellultis therapy?
Incision and drainage (especially for purulent)
Elevation of affected limb (help edema subside)
For abscesses <5cm, I&D alone may be sufficient